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Dryden's writings are studded with names, conspicuously those of his literary predecessors and contemporaries. He defined himself as a writer in relation to other writers, and in doing so was something of a pioneer professional man of letters: poet, playwright, critic, prose stylist, England's foremost verse translator, the first literary historian to provide a conception of periods, and what would now be termed a comparatist. This 1993 book looks at Dryden's literary relationships with Ben Jonson and with French authors (notably Corneille), at issues raised by the work thought to be his greatest by Romantic and contemporary readers, Fables Ancient and Modern; and at Samuel Johnson's definition of Dryden, whose biography in Johnson's Lives was the author's favourite. The book has implications for questions of literary reception, influence and intertextuality, as well as for the reputation and context of Dryden himself.
Authority in literature --- Authorship --- English poetry --- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) --- Intertextuality --- Criticism --- Semiotics --- Artistic impact --- Artistic influence --- Impact (Literary, artistic, etc.) --- Literary impact --- Literary influence --- Literary tradition --- Tradition (Literature) --- Art --- Influence (Psychology) --- Literature --- Intermediality --- Originality in literature --- Authoring (Authorship) --- Writing (Authorship) --- History --- Roman influences --- Dryden, John, --- Criticism and interpretation --- History. --- Influence. --- Knowledge --- Literature. --- Rome --- In literature. --- Dryden, John --- Authority in literature. --- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.). --- Intertextuality. --- Roman influences. --- Arts and Humanities --- Drāydan, Jawn, --- Dryden, --- Author of Absalom & Achitophel, --- Author of Absalom and Achitophel, --- Absalom & Achitophel, Author of, --- Drydon, John, --- Bays, --- Bayes, --- Person of quality, --- D-n, --- Driden, John, --- Drajden, Džon, --- Драјден, Џон,
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Kept women, comic clerics, and political schemers enliven the four plays in this volume of the California Dryden. Dryden asserted that The Kind Keeper was a moral play, dedicated to exposing the "crying sin" of keeping a mistress. The production was closed after three nights, but whether because of the play's success in moralizing, or in exposing, is hard to know.
English poetry. --- LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh. --- English literature --- Dryden, John, --- Dryden, John --- Drāydan, Jawn, --- Dryden, --- Author of Absalom & Achitophel, --- Author of Absalom and Achitophel, --- Absalom & Achitophel, Author of, --- Drydon, John, --- Bays, --- Bayes, --- Person of quality, --- D-n, --- Driden, John, --- Drajden, Džon, --- Драјден, Џон, --- adultery. --- affair. --- aristocracy. --- bloom canon. --- british literature. --- classics. --- comedy. --- duke of guise. --- feminism. --- fiction. --- gender. --- infidelity. --- kind keeper. --- marriage. --- mistress. --- performing arts. --- politics. --- prostitutes. --- rake. --- restoration comedy. --- restoration drama. --- restoration england. --- rogue. --- satire. --- seduction. --- sex. --- sexual morality. --- sexuality. --- social commentary. --- spanish friar. --- theater. --- vindication. --- wit.
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